Archive for the 'Web 2.0' Category

Callpedia

I came across Callpedia the other day.

It is an interesting idea -

  1. you text a query to CallPedia’s text number (+353873204111)
  2. you wait a minute or so and then
  3. you phone CallPedia (+353766020331) and it reads out the WikiPedia entry for your query term

I can see this being great in a situation where you are away from your laptop and need to get info quickly (sales meeting, in the pub chatting someone up, etc.).

However, the voice at the other needs a bit of work. At the minute, it reads out the Wikipedia entry in a complete monotone giving no modulations for grammar so it can be difficult to discern the meaning of the text. And don’t get me started on their excuse for a website!
Still with a bit of work…

Zinadoo enables easy mobile site creation

Zinadoo.com is an online website creation tool specialising in creating websites for mobile devices! When you register with Zinadoo, you are setup with a free zinadoo.mobi subdomain. .mobi is the top level domain created specially for mobile devices.

The timing of this is very coincidental as I did an interview with Neil Edwards, CEO of dotMobi, on Friday which I will be publishing as a podcast on PodLeaders.com later this week.

The online website creator makes constructing mobile aware websites really easy. You can do all the usual stuff like adding links, creating pages, click to call, etc.

The only thing I couldn’t figure out was how to rename the About Us page to simply About!

Zinadoo's mobile site creator

Zinadoo also offer the ability to upgrade to your own .mobi domain (so I’d be tomraftery.mobi instead of tomraftery.zinadoo.mobi).

Best of luck to Zinadoo with this, it seems like an interesting app in a rapidly emerging space.

I see James has a piece up about Zinadoo as well.

Citizendium and the criminally insane!

Josh Catone has an interesting article comparing Wikipedia and Citizendium, with Josh coming out in favour of Wikipedia!

Citizendium is an online encyclopedia, similar to Wikipedia (indeed founded by Larry Sanger, a co-founder of Wikipedia) but where it differs is in its requirement for contributors to use their real names and on its use of ‘experts’ as editors.

From Citizendium:

As a rule of thumb, editors in traditionally “academic” fields will require the qualifications typically needed for a tenure-track academic position in the field, while editors in more “professional” fields require the usual terminal professional degree in the field plus significant experience and publishing

Coincidentally, I was on the TodayFM’s The Last Word last week speaking about Wikipedia and Citizendium with presenter Matt Cooper and Larry Sanger.

Unfortunately it was a short piece and I didn’t get to ask Larry the question I wanted to:

Larry what processes do Citizendium have in place to ensure that your editors/contributors are not, for example, convicted murderers in an institute for the criminally insane?

Had Larry come back with a stock answer about how all contributors will be vetted and no-one will be allowed add to the encyclopedia with that kind of background I would have pounced. William Minor, one of the single most prolific contributors to the first Oxford English Dictionary (>10,000 contributions) was a convicted murderer, later diagnosed with schizophrenia, who at the time of his contributions was incarcerated in Broadmoor Criminal Lunatic Asylum.

The English language would have been worse had it not been for the contributions of this man (who had no qualifications in etymology whatsoever).

Of course, if Larry had said “We welcome contributions from the criminally insane Tom” my clever plan was out the window!

Irish web apps reviewed

David Lenehan has written a great round-up of the Top Irish Web Apps over on Read/Write Web. He seems to have hit on most of the usual suspects (LouderVoice, PutPlace, Nooked, Roam4Free, Pixenate, etc.).

However, the fact that David missed out on a number of up and coming web apps like dbTwang and Touristr only goes to show how difficult it is to keep up with the pace of innovation in Ireland right now.

In the tech world, Ireland is a hot happening place right now.

Salim joins Yahoo!

I see Salim reporting that he has started a new job with Yahoo! Congrats Salim.

Salim has been hired to head up Yahoo! Brickhouse - a new semi-autonomous Yahoo! R&D house which will create new apps for Yahoo! or to be spun off. Yahoo! Pipes was a Yahoo! Brickhouse project, for example.

Salim has been here in Cork several times, most recently speaking at a number of it@cork events (including the now infamous it@cork Web 2.0 mini-conference) and before that Salim lived in Cork for a year or so while he was involved in setting up BUPA Ireland in Fermoy.

I can’t wait to see what he does with the Brickhouse - an interesting project, led by an even more interesting guy.

Any questions for Ross Mayfield?

Tomorrow afternoon I’ll be interviewing Ross Mayfield, co-founder and CEO of Socialtext for a podcast on PodLeaders.com.

Socialtext makes enterprise social software for collaboration - i.e. Wikis, for corporate customers mostly.

If you have any questions you’d like me to put to Ross, please feel free to leave them in the comments of this post.




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